supreme court because my abolition lastjune. in the first ship carrying grain since the russian invasion crosses. hello and welcome to our look ahead to what the papers will be bringing us tomorrow. with me are the broadcaster and journalist james lewer and camilla turner, chief political correspondent at the daily telegraph. we ll say hello to both in a moment. first the, the front pages. the metro leads on the hose pipe man, encouraging people to grass on their neighbours if they water their garden. grass up your granny, says the daily star, which claims people could be fined £1000. the telegraph claims £250 million of water plant built to protect thousands of household from drought has been switched off. the times features the conservative leadership concepts after sajid javid came out in support of liz truzz earlier. the daily express leads with gas prices, fears that rising costs could bush inflation up to 15%. attorney general sue ella braverman has written to say she
congratulations to her. lots to get through, good evening to you both. the hose pipe ban is where we re going to start. it s an interesting story that a lot of people wouldn t particularly have heard of. the headline there, water plants that could prevent hose pipe ban mothballed. ban mothballed. that s right. i think this is ban mothballed. that s right. i think this is the ban mothballed. that s right. i think this is the kind ban mothballed. that s right. i think this is the kind of - ban mothballed. that s right. i think this is the kind of story l ban mothballed. that s right. i. think this is the kind of story that most people wouldn t pay much attention to, but as we can see, this is the big story of tomorrow. so this story on the telegraph is actually very topical. it s talking about how a £250 million plant which thames waters has been supposedly building since 2010 has been quietly shelved. this was meant to be a desalination